Use the interactive ranking table in this section to view, query, rank, compare
housing characteristics of the population, households and families in these areas.
The scroll box shown below lists each of the subject matter items available for each area via the ranking table.
The number at the left of the subject matter item is also used as the short name for the subject matter item
in the column header in the ranking table.

Use the S&O Server for more detail,
alternative formats and data extraction.

Examples
To determine the 113th congressional districts having the highest median value (among occupied housing units) in Texas:
- Click ShowAll button. Click State dropdown and select Texas.
- Use horizontal scroll bar to make column H088 visible.
- Click once on H088 column header then click once more on H088 column header (to sort descending).
- The topmost value: TX03 has the highest $MHV among all Texas districts: $212,900.

113th Congressional Districts Demographic-Economic Ranking Tables -- Housing Characteristics
Click column header to sort; click again to sort other direction.
Access corresponding subject matter for U.S. and states at U.S. & States Housing Characteristics
See usage notes below table. See related Ranking Tables Main Page

Usage Notes
 Column P2010 is the Census 2010 total population. All other items are 2011 estimates.
 Name/Code column: State postal abbreviation followed by CD code
 Use Select Area to select/filter district.
- Click ShowAll button first.
- Key in any part of name and click Select Area button.
- Search will filter for any name with that exact, case sensitive, spelling.
- New York 113th Congressional District 12 -- NY12 -- is used as an example.
 Click ShowAll button between specific queries.
 Cells with -1 value could not be estimated (for this geography and this time frame).

Comparing D001 total population estimate to P2010 Census 2010 population.
D001 is the total population estimate for the 2011.
P2010 is the total population count as of April 1, 2010.

Use
find codes/names
to determine census tract, city/place, school district etc. geocode/area name based on address.

Importance of these Data
These data provide "richer" demographic-economic characteristics for national scope 113th Congressional Districts.
While Census 2010 provides data similar to those items in the General Demographics section, only ACS 2011
sourced data provide details on topics such as income and poverty,
labor force and employment, housing value and costs, educational participation and attainment, language spoken
at home, among many related items. The approximate 600 items accessible via the school district dataset
are supplemented by a wide range of additional subject matter. ACS 2012 data become available for 113th Congressional Districts
in September 2013.

Additional Information
ProximityOne develops geographic-demographic-economic data and analytical tools and helps organizations knit together and use diverse data in a decision-making and analytical framework. We develop custom demographic/economic estimates and projections, develop geographic and geocoded address files, and assist with impact and geospatial analyses.
Wide-ranging organizations use our tools (software, data, methodologies) to analyze their own data integrated with other data.
Follow ProximityOne on Twitter at www.twitter.com/proximityone.
Contact us (888-364-7656) with questions about data covered in this section or to discuss
custom estimates, projections or analyses for your areas of interest.